A French court recognizes virginity—or lack thereof—as grounds for annulment.

On my way to the south of France, I stopped overnight in Calais, and the next morning read the local newspaper, La Voix du Nord, at breakfast. At a court in nearby Lille, the paper said, a judge had annulled the marriage of two people who remained anonymous, but whom La Voix called Karima and Youssef (and Le Figaro dubbed Aicha and Noredine in its report of the same story).

Youssef is a 30-year-old engineer who had married Karima, a student. Youssef is described as a practicing, though not extremist, Muslim, who wanted a “pure” wife. On their wedding night, horror of horrors, Youssef was not able to produce the sheet stained with blood to the assembled guests of both families waiting for it. He therefore felt deeply dishonored.

Legal annulments of marriages are increasingly common in France, and one of the grounds on which courts grant them is that a spouse has been misled about an “essential quality” of the person he or she has married. These might include, for example, drug addiction, a previous divorce, an undisclosed religious persuasion, or a criminal record. The Youssef/Karima matter is the first time, however, that virginity has been legally recognized among such essential qualities.

La Voix du Nord concludes the story with another, more sobering speculation: Will the ruling at Lille fill the consulting rooms of surgeons who specialize in restoring hymens?
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Theodore Dalrymple is the Dietrich Weismann fellow at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor to City Journal. He is a retired doctor who most recently practiced in a British inner-city hospital and prison. Dr. Dalrymple has written a column for the London Spectator for thirteen years and writes regularly for National Review. Denis Dutton, editor of Arts & Letters Daily, called Dr. Dalrymple the "Orwell of our time." Dr. Dalrymple has published two collections of his City Journal essays: Life at the Bottom and Our Culture, What's Left of It. Both were widely praised.